Jesús del Sol (1835 - November 4, 1873) was a Cuban statesman and high-ranking Cuban military figure who was executed in the Virginius Affair during the Ten Years' War.[2]
Jesús del Sol was born in Cienfuegos, Las Villas in Cuba in 1835.[3] His parents were wealthy planters, and he had a sizable property of coffee plantations, horses and cattle before the first independence war.[4]
Ten Years' War
When the Ten Years' War commenced, Jesús del Sol burned the family plantation, approximately worth $50,000. Enrolling in the ranks of the Cuban Liberation Army in 1869, he fought for Cuba's freedom as a mambí captain under the general command of Federico Fernández Cavada.[5]
Jesús Del Sol commanded the Colón district. In 1870, his command of 1,400 men was reported to be encamped between Colón, Maragua, and Palmillas.[6]
In the spring of 1871, while ill and alone in a hut near Santiago, a man brought him coffee with the intent to claim the bounty offered by the Spanish government for his death. He managed to shoot and kill the attacker with a revolver.[5] Jesús del Sol was subsequently captured by Spanish authorities and sent to Spain to be imprisoned, on the condition that he should never return to Cuba.[7] Escaping Spain, he fled to the United States and employed himself in furthering the interests of Cuba.[4] While in New York, he was gradually preparing to reunite with his army in Cuba and had been anticipating an expedition.
The Virginius Expedition
The Spanish Man-of-War Tornado Chasing the American Steamer Virginius